Quick summary
This practical guide to fire evacuation checklist is written for office managers, employers, team leaders, health and safety representatives and facility managers. It helps you identify common risks, improve everyday procedures and decide where safety technology may support a broader safety plan.
The most effective improvements are usually simple: make responsibilities clear, reduce blind spots, secure areas that should not be public, document what happens and review the plan whenever the site or routine changes.
Who this guide is for
This page is for office managers, employers, team leaders, health and safety representatives and facility managers. It is also useful for anyone who needs a clear checklist before speaking with a landlord, installer, manager, committee, insurer, workplace safety adviser or emergency planning professional.
Common risks to consider
- Emergency plans that staff have not practised.
- Contractors entering without induction.
- First aid details being outdated.
- Poor incident reporting habits.
- Workplace aggression not addressed early.
- Procedures that are too complex for everyday use.
Practical steps
- Make emergency instructions easy to find.
- Run short safety briefings.
- Keep first aid and evacuation details current.
- Record near misses as well as incidents.
- Review contractor sign-in and induction.
- Make staff reporting channels clear and practical.
Quick wins
These actions are usually low-cost and can be reviewed immediately:
- Make emergency instructions easy to find.
- Run short safety briefings.
- Keep first aid and evacuation details current.
- Record near misses as well as incidents.
- Review contractor sign-in and induction.
- Make staff reporting channels clear and practical.
Checklist
Printable checklist
Tick items as you review them. Your ticked items can be saved locally in this browser.
How safety technology can help
Security technology can help manage visitor movement, duress response, footage review and after-hours alarms, but it should support rather than replace workplace procedures.
Technology should be planned around the job it needs to do. For example, CCTV may support evidence capture, alarms may support after-hours detection, access control may reduce unauthorised entry and intercoms may help screen visitors before a door is opened.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Buying equipment before defining the actual risk.
- Assuming a policy is working because it exists on paper.
- Letting one person hold all operational knowledge.
- Failing to test the plan at the time it will actually be used.
- Forgetting to remove access when roles, tenants, contractors or staff change.
- Keeping incident records in a way that is hard to find later.
When to call a professional
Use a qualified professional where electrical work, fire systems, security installation, building work, workplace health and safety duties, privacy obligations, height work, vulnerable people or higher-risk environments are involved. For emergencies, contact emergency services immediately rather than using a checklist.
Review schedule
Review this topic after any incident or near miss, when site layout changes, when new staff or tenants arrive, when access permissions change, when equipment is serviced and at least once a year. A short review done consistently is usually more useful than a large document nobody reads.
FAQ
Is this fire evacuation checklist advice enough by itself?
No. Treat it as a practical starting point. Site layout, state rules, workplace duties, insurance expectations and risk level can all change what is appropriate.
Where should I start if the site feels overwhelming?
Start with people, access and response. Identify who could be harmed, who can enter the area, and what should happen if something goes wrong.
Can CCTV, alarms or access control solve the whole problem?
They can help, but they work best with good lighting, clear procedures, staff training, maintenance and responsible privacy practices.
How often should a safety checklist be reviewed?
Review it after an incident or near miss, when the site layout changes, when staff or tenants change, and at a regular monthly or quarterly interval.
When should a professional be involved?
Use a qualified professional when electrical work, fire systems, security installation, building work, workplace safety duties, privacy obligations or high-risk environments are involved.
